Tag Archives: Frank Bainimarama

Pacific leaders declare climate crisis, demand end to coal

Source: RNZ

Pacific leaders have declared a climate crisis in the region and are demanding an end to coal mining.

The declaration was signed by several regional leaders at the Pacific Islands Development Forum in Fiji on Tuesday.

The declaration expresses grave concerns about the impacts the climate crisis will have on the Pacific.

In it, the Pacific Islands Development Forum called on governments of countries with high carbon emissions to stop hindering climate change efforts.

It also demands all coal producers immediately stop any new coal mining and phase out all existing production over the next 10 years.

The declaration asked the development forum’s 14-member states to immediately end subsidies on fossil fuel production.

Echoing 2018’s Boe Declaration from the Pacific Islands Forum, Tuesday’s declaration affirmed “that climate change poses the single greatest threat to the human rights and security of present and future generations of Pacific Island peoples”.

The move was welcomed by environmental non-profit 350.org, with founder Bill McKibben calling it a “very powerful manifesto”.

“The election, in the Pacific, of the government of Australia that continues to want to expand coal mines is a slap in the face to everyone else in that region and in the world,” he said in a videoed statement.

Bainimarama calls for concrete commitments to cut emissions

Meanwhile, Fiji’s prime minister said Pacific leaders should accept nothing less than concrete commitments to cut emissions at next month’s Pacific Islands Forum Summit.

Frank Bainimarama will be attending his first summit since 2008.

Fiji was suspended in 2009 in the wake of the 2006 coup and the abrogation of the then-constitution.

Mr Bainimarama had said he would stay away until New Zealand and Australia were no longer full Forum members.

In a speech at the Pacific Islands Development Forum – which was set up by Fiji after its suspension – Mr Bainimarama said the region cannot accept any watered-down commitments.

At last year’s forum, Australia was exposed as having attempted to water down a resolution that declared climate change the region’s greatest security threat.

Mr Bainimarama said the region needs greater commitments from the region’s bigger neighbours, hinting at Australia and New Zealand.

“Fiji and the Marshall Islands have already announced our intention to revise our own nationally determined contributions, and I urge this … membership to do the same and demand the same from the more developed economies, including and especially our large neighbours in the Pacific.

“We should accept anything less than concrete commitments to curb greenhouse gas emissions in line with the most ambitious aspirations of the Paris Agreement. We cannot allow climate commitments to be watered down at a meeting hosted in a nation whose very existence is threatened by the rising waters lapping at its shores.”

Frank Bainimarama
Frank Bainimarama Photo: RNZ / Koroi Hawkins


Fiji invited to work closely with UN in shaping the 2019 UN Climate Summit

Fiji PM Voreqe Bainimarama presents a gift to the 73rd session of the United Nations General Assembly María Fernanda Espinosa Garcés. Picrture: SUPPLIED
Fiji PM Voreqe Bainimarama presents a gift to the 73rd session of the United Nations General Assembly María Fernanda Espinosa Garcés. Picrture: SUPPLIED

FIJI has been invited by the United Nations to work closely with them to shape next year’s UN Climate Summit convening on September 17 in 2019.

Fiji’s global leadership on climate change and oceans was praised by the president of the 73rd Session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA), María Fernanda Espinosa Garcés, at a meeting in in New York with Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimarama.

Mr Bainimarama met Ms Garcés to talk about a range of issues, including the need for closer collaboration between Fiji and the UNGA to make the UN more relevant to Fijian communities, families and ordinary citizens.

The Fijian PM outlined his priorities for the 73rd Session of the United Nations General Assembly and conveyed his full support towards Ms Garcés in her leadership of the session.

Ms Garcés also commended Mr Bainimarama on his efforts on gender parity in the military and peacekeeping operations.

While in New York, the Prime Minister will take part in a number of high-level bilateral meetings with other global leaders, including other heads of Government, and make statements in a series of forums that address the pressing issues facing Fiji.

Mr Bainimarama will deliver Fiji’s national statement at the United National General Assembly on Friday September 28, 2018.

The 73rd UNGA will open on Tuesday, September 25, and come to a close on Friday, October 5

Can Fiji Save the World?

Fiji wants countries to join its climate canoe at the latest UN climate talks.

When Fiji’s Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama assumed the presidency of the 23rd meeting of the UN’s climate change convention on November 6, he was a long way from his Pacific home. Fiji is the first Pacific Island country to host a UN Conference of the Parties (COP), but is doing so remotely from Bonn, Germany.

With a population of less than one million people, Fiji has taken on an outsized role at the United Nations in recent years, becoming a much more prominent leader on climate change than many much larger countries.

Despite being held in a cold German city, COP 23 will have many Fijian touches. Fiji will lead a dialogue following the Pacific principles of “Talanoa” – sharing stories to build empathy and trust. Bainimarama also plans to delegate formal proceedings so that he can play “a roving role” and be on hand “to resolve any difficulties in the formal negotiations.”

Yet not all countries coming to the meeting are yet ready to climb into Fiji’s canoe.The Fiji police band will perform and a Fijian canoe, known as a drua, will sit in the main foyer of the meeting to remind delegates that “all 7.5 billion people on earth are in the same canoe.”

In particular, this year’s meeting will occur under the cloud of the Trump administration’s threatened withdrawal from the Paris Climate Change Agreement, just two years after the agreement was finally reached. It will contrast with the brief optimism around last year’s meeting in Marrakech, when countries were almost ready for the agreement to enter into force in December 2016.

That particular milestone was in no small part because Fiji had led a small group of countries eager for the agreement to be implemented as soon as possible. Fiji became the first country to officially join the agreement in April 2016, on the first day it was open for signing. These countries hoped to build momentum and avoid the delays that saw the Kyoto Protocol take more than 12 years to enter into force.

The speedy entry-into-force of the Paris Agreement also reflected its differences from the Kyoto Protocol. The Kyoto Protocol legally bound developed countries to emission reduction targets. On the other hand, almost every country both developed and developing, has signed the Paris Agreement, but they are not legally bound to their commitments.

The United States’ planned withdrawal from the Paris Agreement will see it keeping company with only one other country, Syria. Every other country has signed the agreement, even North Korea.

Despite their small populations and economies, small island states like Fiji, have been among some of the biggest leaders on climate change at the United Nations. The impact of climate change on these countries with little protection from vast oceans is now well known.

Fiji is no stranger to some of the worst effects. Its coral reefs are dying, harming fishing and tourism, and salt water is rising, harming the nation’s second biggest export, sugar.

In February 2016, Cyclone Winston, the strongest storm to ever make landfall in the southern hemisphere, hit Fiji, killing 44 people and causing an estimated $1.4 billion in damage, around one-third of the country’s GDP.

The cyclone also prevented Fiji from hosting an Oceans Conference in June 2017. Damage from the cyclone saw the meeting relocated to New York.

The health of the world’s oceans, including the consequences of overfishing, has become another area where Fiji has shown leadership. Fiji’s Peter Thomson, until recently the 71st president of the UN General Assembly, is now the UN’s Special Envoy on Oceans.

All of these efforts have not come without cost to the small nation, still recovering from Cyclone Winston. The presidency of the General Assembly was in part funded by a trust fund set up after corruption plagued the office during Antigua’s recent presidency.

However Fiji’s small size means that it has also not received any of the economic benefits associated with hosting major international meetings. Last year’s COP brought around 20,000 people to Morocco, almost one quarter of the 80,000 tourists Fiji usually receives in a month.

With its white beaches and coral reefs, tourism remains Fiji’s biggest source of income, yet the COP will be held at the headquarters of the UN’s climate body the UNFCCC. Bainimarama has said that his country “simply could not have staged an event of this size and complexity in Fiji” describing it as an example of how countries of vastly different means can work together.

As a small country Fiji has to rely on building relationships with much bigger, richer countries if it plans to address climate change. Most small island states’ carbon emissions are negligible at the global level. Fiji is only responsible for 0.01 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions.

For its part, Fiji has also made commitments to transition fully to renewable energy by the year 2030. Its Pacific neighbor Tuvalu, aims to be the first country to use 100 percent renewable energy by the year 2020.

By contrast some of Fiji’s other neighbors, including Indonesia and Australia, have much higher emissions. Indonesia has particularly high emissions, partly due to peat fires used to clear land for palm oil plantations. Australia, meanwhile, is proceeding to build the Carmichael coal mine, a project of the Indian company Adani, which may potentially attract funding from China. It will be the biggest coal mine in the southern hemisphere, and will also potentially do further damage to the Great Barrier Reef.

China is now the world’s biggest emitter of carbon dioxide, although the United States remains the biggest emitter in history. Facing pressure over air pollution at home, the Chinese government has been taking strident steps to minimize fossil fuels within its own borders. However beyond its borders, China has been involved inan estimated 240 coal power stations in 25 countries through its Belt and Road initiative.

Alongside China, three of the other 10 biggest emitters – India, Japan, and Indonesia – are in Asia.

Ironically, there is a strong correlation between a country’s historic emissions and its ability to adapt to climate impacts due to poverty and lack of infrastructure. Alongside small island states, drought prone countries in Eastern Africa and river delta countries like Bangladesh are also vulnerable.

While small island states like Fiji have been among the countries most consistently sounding the alarm on climate change, the events of 2017 so far have shown that climate related disasters know no boundaries.

This year’s COP has been preceded by a year of unprecedented floods, hurricanes, and wildfires. A full one-quarter of all category five hurricanes to make landfall in the Atlantic Ocean since 1851 made landfall in 2017.

Bainimarama made his speech at the UN General Assembly in September just as Hurricane Maria tore through the Caribbean.  “The appalling suffering in the Caribbean and the U.S. reminds us all that there is no time to waste,” he told the assembly, also recalling the impact of Cyclone Winston on Fiji. “As incoming COP president, I am deeply conscious of the need to lead a global response to the underlying causes of these events.”

This consciousness, together with an understanding that Fiji and many of its closest neighbors simply will not survive unmitigated climate change will inform Fiji’s approach at the 23rd COP, which will run until November 17.

Lyndal Rowlands is a freelance Australian journalist and United Nations correspondent. She has written for Al Jazeera, the Saturday Paper and SciDev and is the former UN bureau chief for Inter Press Service.

For Pacific Island States, Climate Change Is an Existential Threat

 By Grant Wyeth

The decision by President Donald Trump to withdraw the United States from the Paris Agreement on Climate Change has caused much concern across the Pacific. Pacific Island states are some of the most vocal advocates for aggressive carbon reduction targets, and the Paris Agreement had been welcomed at the time of its creation by Pacific Island states.

For many Pacific Island states, the current forecasts for rising sea levels due to climate change will severely impact their territory. For island states such a Tuvalu, Kiribati, and the Marshall Islands, rising sea levels are a genuine and immediate existential threat. These island states exist on territory that rises only a few meters above sea level, at best. This means that any rise in the sea level, no matter how incremental, eats into their very limited landmass. The current predicted sea level rise of 2 meters by 2100 would mean an almost total submersion for these three states.

Other Pacific Island states will also be greatly affected. Five low-lying islands within the Solomon Island archipelago have already been submerged. Changes in both geographic features and water temperatures also have the potential to alter the fishing stocks that Pacific Islands states rely on for food security.

Tuvalu’s Prime Minister Enele Sopoaga was so concerned by Trump’s decision that he ordered his country’s officials to cancel any cooperation with the United States until Washington has a new climate change policy in place. In regards to Trump’s decision, Sopoaga stated: “I think it doesn’t make any sense to talk about any other thing if we don’t fix the problem of climate change… We are very, very distressed, I think this a very destructive, obstructive statement from a leader of perhaps the biggest polluter on earth and we are very disappointed as a small island country already suffering the effects of climate change.”The global, stateless, nature of the climate change phenomenon is keenly understood by Pacific Islands. With little capacity to stem this threat to their existence themselves, these countries rely on the big players to instigate reforms that might prevent more drastic warming of the Earth’s atmosphere, oceans and surfaces.

For Fiji’s Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama, a man who has set himself up as the global champion of the interests of Pacific Island states, the decision was disappointing, but he remained hopeful international cooperation could still result, stating: “I did what I could — along with many leaders around the world — to try to persuade President Trump to remain standing shoulder-to-shoulder with us as we tackled the greatest challenge our planet has ever faced. While the loss of America’s leadership is unfortunate, this a struggle that is far from over.”

Trump’s decision came right before Fiji assumes the presidency of Conference of the Parties (COP), the annual forum for countries that signed up to the 1992 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. The forum will be held in Bonn, Germany from November 6-17 this year.

Fiji’s presidency is a historic event, as it is the first Small Island Developing State to hold the presidency. Fiji’s presidency was designed to highlight the problems that climate change is producing for Pacific Island states — not just rising sea levels, but more intense weather events causing severe destruction, like Cyclone Winston last year, which caused damage valued at 10 percent of the country’s GDP.

In his speech to the UN Climate Change Conference in May (a precursor to the COP23 forum in November), Bainimarama reaffirmed Fiji’s commitment to the goals and the implementation of the Paris Agreement. He outlined his vision that Fiji’s presidency of the COP would have the interests of small island states at its core, wishing to build a coalition of partners to help these states build greater resilience against rising sea levels and extreme weather events. Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Paris Agreement severely undermines Bainimarama’s position, and Fiji’s prominent role in a major multilateral forum.

While Pacific Island leaders have been disappointed with Trump’s decision, that other major powers have reaffirmed their commitment to the Paris agreement will give them some solace. The recent India-Pacific Islands Sustainable Development Conference held in Suva, Fiji, is an indication that other significant powers have an understanding of the situation that Pacific Island states are in. The hope will be that the recalcitrance of the world’s major power will only be temporary, and a future administration will reaffirm its commitment to the Paris goals.

Source: https://thediplomat.com/ 

Cyclone Winston Wreaks Havoc on Fiji

It was one of the South Pacific’s fiercest storms on record.

Cyclone Winston Wreaks Havoc on Fiji
Image Credit: NOAA

Cyclone Winston, which made a direct hit on the Fijian island of Koro over the weekend, was the first Category 5 cyclone to make landfall on Fijian territory in recorded history. The latest reported numbers indicate that 42 people have died as a result of the storm, with aid agencies warning that more may die in the storm’s aftermath as the small country rushes to reach communities on remote islands.

According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), a U.S. agency, the storm’s winds were estimated to have reached 185 mph. Tom Di Liberto, a meteorologist with NOAA’s climate prediction center, wrote that it  “was one of the strongest storms ever recorded in the Southern Hemisphere.”

With the storm over, the recovery has begun but the task is monumental. The Fijian government declared a month-long state of emergency and put out calls for assistance. The storm did not make a direct hit on the country’s capital, Suva, but wreaked havoc on Koro and many of the country’s other islands. There are more than 330 Fijian islands, about a third of which are inhabited.

Fijian Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama gave a national address Wednesday in which he said, “Almost no part of our nation has been left unscarred.” Per the Sydney Morning Herald, Bainimarama focused attention on immediate concerns: food, water, and shelter.Cyclone Winston flattened homes, caused extensive coastal flooding and knocked out utility and communication systems. The storm also irreparably damaged sugarcane crops.

Radio New Zealand reports that New Zealand, Australia, and France have sent relief flights and the United States, China, India, and the EU have all offered financial assistance. The New Zealand Navy is dispatching the HMNZS Canterbury, a multi-role vessel,  and the HMNZS Wellington, an offshore patrol vessel, loaded with supplies to assist in recovery efforts.

Numerous aid agencies and international organizations have pledged help for Fiji. The Asian Development Bank committed to $2 million in emergency assistance. The Red Cross says it had mobilized more than 300 staff and volunteers in the islands and is releasing emergency funds to the Fiji Red Cross.

Days after the storm aid still seems sluggish for some, as Kim Baker Wilson makes clear in a report for Radio New Zealand from Rakiraki, a district on the northern edge of the island of Fiji’s main island of Vitu Levu. An estimated 1,000 homes were destroyed in Rakiraki.

And more is needed. Ewan Perrin, the newly-appointed permanent secretary for Communication and Information Technology, said that Fiji would “definitely need more international assistance.” From his comments reported by Radio New Zealand, Perrin said Fiji had “everything that we need at this stage” but that more assistance would be needed in the medium to long term.

Fiji’s economy is built on sugar and tourism, both of which are likely to take a massive hit in the storm’s wake.

Last year, Cyclone Pam made a direct hit on Vanuatu, devastating the country. In the months after the storm, Vanuatu’s political system nearly imploded with a quarter of the parliament jailed on corruption charges.

Pacific island nations–like Fiji–have led the charge on climate change globally, sounding the warning siren because their communities will be among the first affected by rising sea levels and worsening storms. Ahead of the Paris climate change talks last year, Bainimarama warned,“Unless the world acts decisively in the coming weeks to begin addressing the greatest challenge of our age, then the Pacific, as we know it, is doomed.”